Method of obtaining a polyepitopic protein as well as a dna vector for embodying this method

ABSTRACT

We disclose a method of obtaining a polyepitopic protein, a DNA vector for the embodiment of the method as well as polyepitopic proteins fused with macromolecular carriers. The proteins obtained according to the present invention are in a number of uses, in particular when used in the production of improved vaccines.

The subject of the present invention is a method of obtaining a polyepitopic protein as well as a DNA vector for embodying this method. The proteins obtained according to the present invention protein may find a number of uses, and in particular for the production of improved vaccines.

Shen, S-H P.N.A. Sci USA 81:4627-4631 (1984) discloses a method of obtaining of a multimeric proinsulin (up to 7 copies). The multimers were obtained using the consecutive concatenation of DNA lengths using synthetic DNA fragments cut with the IIS endonuclease—SfaNI, alkaline phosphatase, polynucleotide kinase and DNA ligase. This method, however, did not make it possible to produce a multiply repeated DNA sequence in one reaction, because each time only a single additional monomer copy could be added. Lennick et al. Gene 61:103-112 (1987) discloses multimeric gene encoding 8 copies of a peptide hormone—atrial natriuretic peptide. The method described does not use a vector that would make it possible to generate multiple copies of sequences encoding a peptide, and the resulting multimeric gene produced in vitro was finally cloned into a commonly used expression vector. This method also has not made it possible to easily multiply the DNA sequence in a single reaction, because each time a only single additional monomer copy could be added. Kim, S. C. and Szybalski, W., Gene 71:1-8 (1988) discloses a method of directionally amplifying a cloned DNA fragment using a IIS restriction endonuclease—BspMl, the pSK3 DNA vector as well as DNA ligase. 30 monomer copies were obtained in the concatemer. However, the use of BspMl is made difficult in practice, because it does not digest the substrate DNA completely. In effect, it's not possible to maintain ORF continuity, and the amplification introduces additional DNA sequences into the amplified concatemer. The method described does not make it possible to repeat the amplification cycle which significantly limits the possibility of obtaining the desired number of repeating DNA segments. The vector disclosed was not an expression vector. Lee, J. H. et al., Genetic Analysis: Biomolecular Engineering 13:139-145 (1996) discloses a method of directionally amplifying a cloned DNA fragment sing the IIS restriction endonucleases BspMl and Bbsl, the pBBS1 DNA vector as well as DNA ligase. This method, based on the autoligation of 4-nucleotide (nt) sticky DNA ends makes it impossible to maintain ORF continuity, since it made it possible to repeat the amplification cycle in order to achieve the desired number of copies of the amplified DNA segment. The vector used was not an expression vector. The method was used to amplify a short antibacterial peptide gene—mogainin (108 copies). Lee, J. H. et al., Protein Expression and purification 12:53-60 (1998) discloses another variant of a method based on the previously described vector, pBBS1. The vector used was not an expression vector. The authors used the Bbsl enzyme to generate 4-nt sticky ends, seriously impeding ORF continuity. The document describes the production of no more than 6 copies of the DNA monomer DNA in the amplified sequence. The method was used for amplifying the mogainin antibacterial peptide gene as well as bufferin II. Wang, Y.-Q and Cai, J. Y. Appl Biochem Biotechnol. 141:203-13 (2007) discloses another variant of multimerizing genes encoding antibiotic peptides using the autoligation of synthetic DNA fragments, containing asymmetric sticky ends in the presence of 2 DNA adapters. The adapters contained sequences recognised by the restriction endonucleases Sall and EcoRl. The procedure used no vector, the amplification is hard to control and requires the addition of consecutive portions of the synthetic DNA monomer during the reaction. The disclosed method of polymeric gene construction, designed for the production of antibacterial peptides, resulted in 8 monomer copies in a polymeric protein.

The goal of the present invention is to deliver a method of easily obtaining a polyepitopic protein of arbitrary length, a vector useful in the embodiment of the method as well as of obtaining higher order polyepitope structures. The resulting polyepitopic proteins as well as higher order polyepitope structures are useful in a broad selection of uses, and in particular can be used to produce improved vaccines of increased efficacy.

The subject of the present invention is a DNA vector containing the sequence of the amplifying module encompassing two convergent DNA sequences recognised by the Sapl endonuclease and the intervening DNA sequence containing the site for the cloning-in of the insert recognised by the endonuclease Smal, wherein preferably the amplifying module possesses the sequence GCTCTTCACCCGGGCCCAGAAGAGC (Seq. Id. No. 11).

Preferably, a DNA vector according to the present invention is a protein expression vector, which additionally contains an origin of replication, preferably p15A, antibiotic resistance gene, preferably chloramphenicol, a transcription promoter, preferably PR of the lambda bacteriophage, a repressor gene, preferably c1857ts, a translation initiation signal, and possibly a sequence encoding 6 histidine residues, as well as a sequence encoding a translation stop signal. Preferably, a DNA vector according to the present invention contains a sequence selected from amongst sequences 1-6 also shown in FIG. 2. Preferably, a DNA vector according to the present invention possesses sequence 7 (pAMP1-HisA).

The next the subject of the present invention is a method of obtaining a polyepitopic protein characterised in that:

a) a blunt-ended DNA sequence encoding the epitope is cloned into a DNA vector defined above at a site recognised by the endonuclease Smal or a sticky-ended DNA sequence encoding the epitope is cloned into a DNA vector defined above at a site recognised by the Sapl endonuclease. Optionally, in order to increase concatamer formation efficiency, it is possible to carry out a pre-ligation of the DNA sequence with sticky ends, which ensure directional ligation prior to adding the vector that had been Sapl-digested.

b) the resulting vector is amplified in bacterial host, isolated and digested with the IIS subtype restriction Sapl endonuclease, and then the isolated fragment containing the DNA sequence encoding the epitope, modified such that, it is equipped with single-stranded sticky ends, that ensure the directional ligation of the insert to the concatemer,

c) the isolated fragment is autoligated,

d) the autoligation product is cloned into a DNA vector defined in claims 1-4 at a site recognised by the subtype IIS restriction Sapl endonuclease and

e) the resulting vector is used to transform a bacterial host and ant then the polyepitopic protein is expressed and isolated,

wherein in order to increase the size of the polyepitopic protein, stages from b) to d) are repeated prior to realising stage e).

Optionally, use is made of another epitope amplification stage by immobilizing the resulting polyepitopic protein defined above on a macromolecular carrier, such as: microorganisms, cells, bacteria, bacteriophages, viruses, defective virions, autoaggregating proteins, or nanoparticles. The following examples contain a detailed description of one possible embodiment variant of the method according to the present invention. An alternative method of cloning in the insert is the use of a Sapl-digested vector with sticky ends filled in using DNA polymerase in the presence of deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates. Following the present invention a person skilled in the art can propose subsequent embodiment variants. Preferably, the epitope is a HBV epitope, particularly that encoded by the synthetic sequence 9 (see also FIG. 3). Preferably, the amplified monomer segment may contain different epitopes, from different proteins or different regions of the same protein, preferably encoded by a synthetic sequence (see schematic in FIG. 1).

We also disclose a method of constructing as well as using artificial genes that do not occur in nature using genetic engineering methods as well as chemical synthesis, containing multiple DNA copies encoding repeating segments, containing multiple monomer units of one or more peptides. The amplification of a gene, encoding a peptide (epitope) with a particular biological or chemical function leads to the amplification of the desirable interaction of the resulting (poly)peptide with a specific ligand. In particular such polyepitopic proteins are useful as: (i) artificial antigens—a new generation of vaccines with a magnified potential stimulation of the immune system; (ii) polyproteins containing modules for rare metal chelation for their industrial production or environmental remediation; (iii) a binding module for enzyme cofactors (such as cations, anions, organic molecules) such as proteases acting within a wound in order to stop deleterious activities; (iv) protective multiepitopic proteins, multiplex modules containing peptides with activators or inhibitors of biological functions for the treatment of molecular, viral and bacterial diseases; (V) multiepitopic proteins containing multimers of peptide hormones or biologically active fragments of signalling proteins and those that stimulate tissue regeneration. Such proteins, placed in a wound, would gradually release biologically active peptides under the influence of proteinases, stimulating the regeneration of tissue; (vi) the polyepitopic protein is immobilized on macromolecular carriers, such as microorganisms, cells, bacteria, bacteriophages, viruses, defective virions, autoaggregating proteins, or nanoparticles. The immobilization may be performed using genetic or chemical means. Immobilized polyepitopic proteins, may magnify the effect of the envisaged uses (i) - (vi).

In particular, we designed a vector-enzymatic system for the amplification of a DNA segment. The amplified DNA segment may be natural origin or the result of a chemical synthesis.

EXAMPLE 1 General Schematic of the Embodiment of the Method According to the Present Invention

FIG. 1 illustrates a general schematic of the method according to the present invention described using the example of the amplification of the surface antigen of HBV. This represents a schematic of the amplification vector as well as amplification reaction of the epitope (in the figure: synthetic HBV epitope). The amplifying vector contains 2 convergent DNA sequences recognised by the sub-type IIS restriction endonuclease, that preferentially recognises a relatively long DNA sequence, which cuts DNA and generates 3-nt (or multiples of 3 nt) sticky ends. We used the Sapl endonuclease, whose particular characteristic is that it recognises a relatively long sequence of 7 base pairs (unique in the vector and amplified DNA segment) which cuts DNA at a distance of 1 nt in the upper chain and 4 nt in the lower chain, thereby generating 3-nt sticky ends, or the equivalent of a single codon. The Sapl sites are adjacent in the vector to the sequence of the classic Type II endonuclease, which is designed for cloning in the inserted DNA. We used the Smal endonuclease, which cuts DNA within the recognition sequence, generating the so-called “blunt” ends. A vector cut with Smal may be cloned with any arbitrary DNA segment, synthetic or natural, which is then to be amplified. In a preferable embodiment, the amplified DNA segment encodes an antigen or amino-acid sequence encompassing several identical or differing antigens. The only limit is the length of the amplified fragment, as dictated by the length of the insert DNA accepted by a given class of DNA vector. The amplifying module may be transferred to different classes of vectors using cloning.

EXAMPLE 2 A Series of 6 Designed pAMP1 Vectors

In the example embodiment shown in FIG. 2 we designed the 1st series of pAMP vectors, based on the vector skeleton, containing a p15A origin of replication. From among the designed vectors, we built pAMP1-A (not containing the 6 histidine residue fusion tag) as well as pAMP1-HisA (containing the 6 histidine residue tag). Additionally, the pAMP vector series was built with the option of the high expression of proteins under the control of the lambda phage P_(R) as well as the option of fusing with the His6 tag, which enables the isolation of the polyepitopic protein using an efficient metalloaffinity chromatography protocol.

Vectors contain the origin of replication p15A, an antibiotic resistance gene against chloramphenicol, the strong transcription promoter P_(R) from the lambda bacteriophage, a repressor gene, c1857ts, translation initiation signals, a sequence of 6 histidine residues with an affinity for nickel ions, a restriction site system for fusing to the translation start codon ATG as well as a module for the directional amplification of a DNA fragment maintaining the ORF, containing convergent restriction sites for a IIS subtype endonuclease, preferably Sapl, separated by a short DNA segment, which can contain ancillary restriction sites for cloning in the insert DNA, preferably Smal. The variants differ in terms of the possibility of manipulating three reading frames (which may be significant when amplifying natural, non-synthetic DNA sequences) as well as the presence or absence of a His6 tag (excellent for easing the subsequent isolation of the expressed polyepitopic protein, regardless of its charge, solubility and other biochemical parameters). Variant 4 was used for the following example of the amplification of the epitope from the surface antigen of HBV. The amplifying module may be introduced by way of cloning in various classes of vector, containing, for example, alternative origins of replication, antibiotic resistance genes, transcriptional promoters and translation signals. For example, we transferred the amplifying module to the vector pBAD/Myc-HisA as well as pET21d21d(+),possessing ampicillin resistance, a colE1 origin of replication as well as araBAD or T7 transcription promoters, respectively. Synthetic modules with sticky ends for the enzymes Ncol and Sacl, in versions containing and not containing the His6 residue affinity tag, were cloned into a vector cut with these enzymes, thereby enabling the expression of the polyepitopic proteins using the araBAD or T7 promoters (respectively). We obtained the vectors: pBADAMPI-A, pBADAMPI-HisA, pETAMPI-A, pETAMPI-HisA possessing the inserted amplifying module at the standard MCS (multiple cloning site).

The full sequence of the pAMP1-HisA vector used in example 3 is shown as sequence 7. Furthermore, in FIG. 8 we show a restriction map of the pAMP1-HisA vector, and in FIG. 9 a restriction map of the pAMP1-HisA vector with a cloned-in 13-mer antigenic peptide. The sequences of the synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides, encoding the amplifying module transferred into pBAD and pET vectors, used in example 2 are shown as sequences 12, 13, 14 and 15.

EXAMPLE 3 Production of a Polyepitopic Protein Containing a Model 7 Amino-Acid Epitope of the HBV Surface Antigen

A model 7 amino-acid epitope of the HBV surface antigen subjected to the amplification reaction is shown in FIG. 3. The synthetic DNA fragment encoding the epitope of the HBV surface antigen was subjected to a pilot amplification experiment in the vector pAMP1-HisA. We obtained >60 copies of the epitope in the DNA concatemer in vitro as well as 13 copies IN THE HYBRID polyepitopic protein cloned in vivo. FIG. 4 shows the results of the amplification reaction in vitro of a 7 amino-acid epitope from the model HBV surface protein using the pAMP1-HisA vector, the Sapl endonuclease as well as DNA ligase. We analysed the amplification reaction using PAGE. We cloned a synthetic DNA fragment of 21 by into the amplifying vector pAMP1-HisA, encoding the 7 amino-acid epitope of HBV. A plasmid containing the monomer HBV epitope digested with the Sapl endonuclease, excising the modified epitope gene from the plasmid construct. The modification consisted of adding to it 3-nt, single-stranded 5′ sticky ends. Aside from the amplification function, in the final polymeric hybrid protein, these ends are responsible for the addition of a proline residue, the so-called “helical breaker”, which separate the epitope monomers and facilitate the independent folding of the epitope into tertiary structures, thereby help to maintain their natural spatial structure. The number of added “helical breakers” can be regulated arbitrarily by incorporating amino-acids encoding them to the end of the synthetic epitope (at the level of its encoding DNA). The excised modified DNA encoding the epitope was subjected to autoligation in vitro. Lanes from 5 to 160 minutes show the autoligation kinetics. Reaction products were analysed electrophoretically, yielding a series of DNA segments of increasing length, that are directional concatemers (polymers) of the epitope gene in relation to the control reaction without the DNA ligase (K). The resulting in vitro concatemers were re-cloned into pAMP1-HisA, where they could be subjected to another amplification cycle or expression of the encoded multimeric protein. FIG. 5 shows the results of hybrid clone analysis of genes encoding the polyepitope HBV protein obtained during the first amplification round. The mixture of in vitro polymerised synthetic HBV epitope genes (FIG. 4, lane: MIX) using the following system: the amplification vector pAMP1-HisA/Sapl endonuclease/DNA ligase was recloned into the amplification vector pAMP1-HisA, so as to fix the variants of poly-HBV epitope genes, express the encoded polyepitopic proteins as well as to reiterate the amplification cycle. In the first round of the amplification reaction, we obtained a series of clones, containing from 2 to 13 copies of the epitope (lanes 1-13, PCR analysis, DNA fragments migrate slower and slower due to their increasing length, a direct sign of the number of attached epitope copies). An analysis of the DNA sequence showed the continuity of the ORF in the resulting constructs, thus each such synthetic poly-gene encodes different polyepitopic HBV protein, which is significant in terms of the target role of these synthetic proteins. This is due to the fact that their different variants will induce differing intensities of immune response as well as differing in solubility. After re-excising with Sapl, each of the concatemer gene variants may be in completely subjected to another amplification reaction, leading to subsequent poly-genes composed of hundreds of copies of the HBV epitope gene (separated by proline residues), within the hybrid construct, maintaining ORF continuity in an Escherichia coli bacterial hyper-expression system. Thereby, each consecutive amplification round increases the number of monomer copies in the concatemer at a geometric rate, leading in a short time to obtaining the planned number of copies in the target plasmid construct variants. FIG. 6 shows the results of the second round of amplification of a pentamer concatemer of the HBV epitope. The DNA fragment was excised using the Sapl endonuclease from a pAMP1-HisA construct containing a concatemer of 5 epitope copies, obtained during the 1st round of amplification and subjected to amplification again. The largest concatemer, visible at the edge of agarose gel resolution, contains 12 copies of the pentamer, constituting a 60-fold directionally polymerised HBV epitope. Larger concatemers are evidently visible, although not separated into distinct bands. The resulting 2nd round products were recloned into pAMP-HisA and may be subjected to a third round of round of amplification, leading to the production of hundreds or thousands of HBV epitope copies, set out in a single recombinant polypeptide (protein) with a continuous ORF. These clones were also subjected to analytical expression in order to obtain variants of epitope multiplication within the polyepitopic protein. FIG. 7 shows an example expression analysis of the hybrid gene encoding the polyepitopic HBV protein, obtained during the first, model, round of amplification (13-mer) in the pAMP1-HisA vector (Seq. Id. No. 7, FIG. 8). We performed an electrophoretic analysis of the expressed polyHBV epitope 13-mer in a polyacrylamide gel under denaturing conditions and Coomassie Blue staining. Lane M, protein mass marker (GE LMW Calibration Kit); lanes K0-3: recombinant Escherichia coli culture, containing a 13-mer HBV construct prior to induction, and sampled at 0, 1, 2 and 3 hours. lanes 1h-16h: recombinant Escherichia coli cultures, containing the 13-mer HBV construct after thermal induction, sampled at 1, 2, 3, 4 and 16 hours. The red arrow indicates the growing HBV 13-mer band, stained purple-red. The unusual purple-red staining of the 13-mer band, whose concentration increases over the duration of the expression induction in bacteria (consecutive lanes), stems from the ordered arrangement of the stain on repeating sequence amino-acid segments and may thus serve as an additional tests for the presence of polyepitopic proteins during detection and isolation. We used expression analysis (protein synthesis in vivo) on a clone containing a variant of the 13-copy concatemer genu resulting from the amplification of a 7-amino-acid epitope of HBV, where each epitope is separated by a proline residue (expression plasmid see: Seq. Id. No. 8, FIG. 9). This technology maintains ORF continuity. The expression was conducted in the system: Escherichia coli/P_(R) lambda bacteriophage promoter, yielding the over-expression of the artificial polyepitopic HBV protein. FIG. 10 ABC represents the isolation procedure of the expression of the polyepitopic protein example variant: 13-copy concatemer gene, as well as Western blot detection. From a preparative (10 L) recombinant bacterial culture (bearing the amplification vector, expressing the 13-mer HBV epitope) and after induction and expression, w centrifuged off the bacterial biomass and subjected it to the following procedures: (i) ultrasonic disintegration and centrifugation of cellular debris; (ii) heating the lysate to 65° C. to denature the host proteins and centrifugation of the precipitated proteins; (iii) treatment of the preparation with buffered polyethylenimine in order to remove nucleic acids as well as acidic host proteins and centrifugation of the precipitate; (iv) fractioning by salting out with ammonium sulphate, centrifuging the precipitate containing the 13-mer HBV epitope and its dissolution in a buffer for use in a subsequent isolation stage; (v) AKTA high-performance affinity chromatography in a gel for chelating nickel ions—HiTrap IMAC HP, which binds the 6 histidine residue tag at the N-end of the 13-mer; (vi) AKTA high-performance molecular sieving chromatography in Superdex 200 pg. The purified preparation of the electrophoretically homogenous 13-mer polyepitopic protein was subjected to Western blotting using anti-6 histidine residue tag monoclonal antibodies, where the chromogenic reaction was performed using conjugated HRP as well as 3,3′,4,4′-tetraaminobiphenyl tetrahydrochloride. FIG. 10 shows: panels A-B: denaturing PAGE of samples from consecutive stages of isolating the 13-mer HBV epitope. Lane: M—molecular mass marker (GE LMW Calibration Kit); lane 1—recombinant bacteria cells expressing the 13-mer; lane 2—cell extract resulting from ultrasonication; lane 3—denatured protein precipitate after heating; lane 4—supernatant containing the 13-mer after treatment with polyethylenimine; lane 5 and 6—supernatant containing 13-mer after fractionation with ammonium sulphate; lane 7—HBV 13-mer after purification using metalloaffinity chromatography; lane 8—homogenous 13-mer after molecular sieving chromatography; panel C: Western blot detection. Lane 1—molecular mass marker (GE LMW Calibration Kit); lane 2—purified HBV 13-mer preparation; lane 3—Western blot detection with anti-6 histidine residue tag (Merck) antibodies. Because none of the recombinant host's own proteins contain the sequence of 6 histidines, the positive reaction indisputably confirms that the isolated protein is the polyepitope 13-mer of HBV. An additional confirmation is the expected size of the isolated protein in comparison to mass markers as well as specific binding to the HiTrap IMAC HP gel. The procedure is universal, successfully confirmed in the isolation of other variants of polyepitopic proteins, fused with 6 histidine residue tags, and contains varying amounts of polymerised HBV epitope.

EXAMPLE 4 Production of Higher Order Multimeric Structures Containing Several Hundred Immobilised Copies of the Polyepitopic Protein, Containing the Model 7 Amino-Acid Epitope of the HBV Surface Antigen on the Capsid Surface of T7 Bacteriophage

The construction of polyepitopic proteins facilitates a multiple increase in the concentration of the epitope in a single protein molecule, and a subsequent amplification stage is based on the combination of many polyepitopic protein molecules in one higher order structure. This may be achieved: (i) biologically, through the fusion of the gene encoding the polyepitopic protein with the genetic material of a higher order structural carrier such as a chromosome, nucleoid, microorgamal plasmid, a bacterium, bacteriophage or virus or (ii) by chemical means, through the use of factors that conjoin macromolecules. FIG. 11 represents the sequence of a poly-genic polyepitopic protein of a pentamer epitope with indicated primers that serve to amplify the HBV epitope polygene and to introduce the restriction sites for EcoRI and HindIII, which are used for genetically fusing it with a bacteriophage vector. This sequence was used to design an example biological immobilisation procedure for the polyepitope HBV pentamer epitope protein on the surface of the T7 bacteriophage capsid which infects Escherichia coli. We used the commercial Novagen T7Select® Phage Display System in the version using the phage vector T7Select415-1b. The system precisely immobilised 415 polypeptide copies with a length not exceeding ca. 50 amino-acid residues, thus the complete macromolecular structure, where we preferably used a pentamer HBV epitope, contains 2075 copies HBV epitope. The immobilisation procedure for the polyepitopic protein on the bacteriophage capsid surface consists of the following stages: (i) PCR amplification of the fragment encoding the pentamer HBV epitope, introducing restriction sites for the endonucleases HindIII and EcoRI, dedicated for the vector T7Select415-1b for cloning DNA fragments, while maintaining ORF continuity for its translation with a protein forming the T7 capsid; (ii) digestion of the PCR-amplified fragment with the restriction endonucleases HindIII and EcoRI; (iii) directional ligation of the digested PCR fragment with pre-digested HindIII and EcoRI left and right arms of the T7 bacteriophage; (iv) packing in vitro of the recombinant T7 bacteriophage and infection of the host Escherichia coli; (v) isolation of individual clones of the recombinant T7 bacteriophage, amplification of the clones as well as validation of the DNA sequence produced with the designed sequence. The sequence of the PCR product being the substrate for producing the insert for the Phage Display System (encoding a variant of the pentamer HBV epitope) used in Example 4 is shown as sequence 16, and the sequences of the PCR primers used to amplify the variant of 5 HBV epitopes are shown as sequences 17 and 18.

EXAMPLE 5 Immunological Activity of the Polyepitope HBV Protein

The 25-mer polyepitope HBV protein of Example 2 was isolated from recombinant bacteria using the procedure shown in Example 4. Representative groups of mice (6 individuals each) were inoculated with 20 ug/mouse with a purified 25-mer in PBS buffer mixed with Freund's incomplete adjuvant. In parallel, we inoculated a control group with PBS and Freund's incomplete adjuvant. The vaccination cycle encompassed 3 injections at 3-week intervals. FIG. 12 shows a Western blot of a purified 25-mer used in example 3 as well as a recombinant T7 bacteriophage displaying several hundred copies of the pentamer HBV epitope used in example 4. The samples, separated using denaturing PAGE, were Western blotted, using sera from mice inoculated with the 25-mer polyepitope HBV protein mixed with incomplete Freund's adjuvant as well as the sera of control mice inoculated with PBS and incomplete Freund's adjuvant. Lane M, Page Ruler marker; lane 1, purified recombinant bacteriophage containing the pentamer HBV epitope. Panel A left-hand arrow denotes the position of the fusion protein of the bacteriophage T7 capsid and the pentamer HBV epitope. The right-hand arrows in Panel A show multimeric forms of the purified 25-mer protein; Lane 2: 25-mer polyepitope HBV protein according to FIG. 10 purified to homogeneity. The results show a specific humoral immune response after 3 initial immunisation cycles, directed against multimers of the 7-amino-acid HBV epitope, present both in the polyepitopic protein as well as polyepitopic proteins displayed on the capsid of the recombinant bacteriophage T7. At the same time, a positive Western blot result, in addition to the DNA sequence of the recombinant bacteriophage T7, validates the correctness of the Example 4 cloning procedure and the variants of recombinant bacteriophages displaying the pentamer HBV epitope, as well as indicating the possibility of using the described technology in variants of new generation vaccines. The resulting polyepitopic HBV proteins as well as the recombinant T7 bacteriophage, endowed with multiple copies of the polyepitopic HBV protein constitute a prototype anti-HBV vaccine. 

1. A DNA vector comprising an amplifying module, the amplifying module comprising two convergent DNA sequences recognized by Sapl endonuclease and a DNA sequence found between them containing a site for cloning in an insert recognised by Smal endonuclease.
 2. The DNA vector according to claim 1, wherein the vector is a protein expression vector, and additionally comprises an origin of replication, an antibiotic resistance gene, a transcription promoter, a repressor gene, and a translation initiation signal.
 3. The DNA vector according to claim 1, wherein the amplifying module comprises a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ. ID. NOs. 1-7.
 4. (canceled)
 5. A method of obtaining polyepitopic protein, comprising the steps of: a) cloning a blunt-ended DNA sequence encoding an epitope into a DNA vector of claim 1 at a site recognized by Smal endonuclease, b) amplifying the resulting vector in a bacterial host, isolating the vector, digesting the vector with Sapl endonuclease, isolating fragment containing the DNA sequence encoding the epitope, modifying the fragment such that it becomes equipped with single-stranded sticky ends facilitating directional ligation of the insert to a concatemer, c) autoligating the isolated fragment, d) cloning the autoligation product into a DNA vector of claim 1 at a site recognised by Sapl endonuclease, e) transform a bacterial host with the resulting vector,
 6. The method according to claim 5, wherein the epitope is an HBV epitope.
 7. The method according to claim 5, wherein the amplified fragment is a monomer fragment and contains various epitopes, stemming from different proteins or different regions of the same protein.
 8. The method according to claim 5, wherein the polyepitopic protein additionally contains a sequence facilitating its purification comprising a fusion tag containing a sequence of 6 histidine residues, and the polyepitopic protein is isolated with a metalloaffinity chromatography.
 9. The method according to claim 5, wherein the step e) comprises immobilizing the polyepitopic protein on a macromolecular carrier.
 10. The DNA vector according to claim 1, wherein the amplifying module comprises Seq. Id. No.
 11. 11. The DNA vector according to claim 2, wherein the origin of replication comprises pl5A.
 12. The DNA vector according to claim 2, wherein the antibiotic resistance gene comprises chloramphenicol, the transcription promoter comprises PR of the lambda bacteriophage, the repressor gene comprises c1857ts.
 13. The DNA vector according to claim 2, further comprising a sequence encoding 6 histidine residues and a sequence encoding a translation stop signal.
 14. The method according to claim 5, wherein Steps (b) to (d) are repeated to increase the size of the polyepitopic protein prior to Step (e).
 15. The method according to claim 6, wherein the HBV epitope is encoded by SEQ. ID. NO.
 9. 16. The method according to claim 7, wherein the different proteins or different regions of the same protein are encoded by a synthetic sequence.
 17. The method according to claim 8, wherein the metalloaffinity chromatography comprises immobilized nickel.
 18. The method according to claim 8, further comprising an additional purification step selected from a group consisting of heating the polyepitopic protein, fractionation using polyethylenimine, salting out with ammonium sulphate, and molecular sieving gel chromatography.
 19. The method according to claim 8, wherein the macromolecular carrier is selected from the group consisting of microorganisms, cells, bacteria, bacteriophages, viruses, defective virions, autoaggregating proteins, and nanoparticles.
 20. The method according to claim 8, Wherein the macromolecular carrier is a Phage Display system in the T7 bacteriophage.
 21. A vaccine comprising the DNA vector of claim
 1. 22. A method of increasing immune response comprising administering to a subject in need thereof the vaccine of claim
 21. 